New figures show scale of EU's migrant crisis

Update:
August, 19/2015 - 12:13

|

GENEVA — A record 107,500 migrants crossed the European Union's borders last month, according to new figures on Tuesday, showing they are arriving in dramatically increasing numbers and creating a humanitarian crisis for the 28-nation bloc.

EU border agency Frontex reported that its latest figures far outstripped the previous monthly record in June of 70,000.

During the first seven months of the year, there were nearly 340,000 migrants, up from 123,500 during the same period last year, Frontex said.

"This is an emergency situation for Europe that requires all EU member states to step in to support the national authorities who are taking on a massive number of migrants at its borders," Frontex director Fabrice Leggeri said in a statement.

Germany alone expects as many as 750,000 refugees to seek asylum there this year, according to media reports.

The UN refugee agency said in the last week alone, 20,843 migrants – virtually all of them fleeing war and persecution in Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq – arrived in Greece, which has seen around 160,000 migrants land on its shores since January, according to the UN refugee agency.

"The pace of arrivals has been steadily increasing in recent weeks," UNHCR spokesman William Spindler told reporters in Geneva. But the wave of migrants has impacted Europe from its southern islands to the northern countries. – Asylum seekers in Germany – Germany, as Europe's economic powerhouse, has become the refugees' top destination, with one in three who arrived in the EU last year seeking asylum there.

According to a report in the Handelsblatt newspaper, Berlin expects up to three-quarters of a million to apply for asylum in 2015. UN refugee chief Antonio Guterres called on Tuesday for more solidarity among European countries in taking in asylum seekers, insisting it was "unsustainable" for Germany, along with Sweden, to take in the majority of refugees.

France and Britain meanwhile were preparing to sign a deal this week to try to alleviate the migrant crisis in the northern French port of Calais, where thousands of people desperate to get to Britain through the Channel tunnel have gathered.

And there is no sign the flood of migrants into Europe will subside. Some 250,000 migrants have already crossed the Mediterranean this year to Italy and Greece, and the International Organisation for Migration said on Tuesday it expected that number to pass 300,000 by the end of the year.

The ones who make it to shore are the lucky ones, with 2,440 people having died trying so far this year, according to the UNHCR.

That number includes the 49 migrants asphyxiated in the hold of a ship carrying 362 people that sank at the weekend. Italy said on Tuesday eight suspected people smugglers had been arrested.

They are accused of condemning the victims to their deaths by forcing them to stay in the ship's fume-filled hold. Another five Syrian refugees reportedly died on Tuesday and 24 were rescued when a boat overturned after leaving Turkey's Bodrum peninsula for the Greek island of Kos. — AFP